A long-watched Hyperliquid ETH has become a public stress point for traders tracking whale leverage in real time. On June 23, Lookonchain said the account identified as Machi Big Brother was liquidated seven times in a ten-hour period while still holding long positions.
Seven forced exits within a ten-hour window would typically be a trader-specific blowout. On Hyperliquid, the broadcast route, liquidation charts, and social attention can all point the market toward the same vulnerable price zone.
In those situations, the whale becomes both a trader and a data point.


We are currently experiencing a liquid but uncertain ETH market. CryptoSlate’s Ethereum market page showed ETH at $1,607 on June 24, down 3% in 24 hours, with a market capitalization of almost $194 billion and a 24-hour volume almost $13.5 billion.
CoinGlass ETH derivatives page also shows open interest of nearly $22.7 billion and 24-hour futures liquidations of nearly $213 million at the time of writing. These numbers indicate correlation rather than causation, and explain how a visible level of liquidation becomes a focal point in a market where leverage, attention and price can interact.
Why visible leverage on Hyperliquid changes the setup
Hyperliquid is one of the clearest ways to monitor big offender traders because its account-level activity can be analyzed alongside market data tools. The HypurrScan address page cited in connection with the Lookonchain claim provides a public access point.
MintGlass’ Hyperliquid liquidation card presents liquidation amounts and price distributions across different levels. That makes the risk of a forced exit something traders can look at in advance, and not just something they read about after a cascade.
The mechanism is simple. A leveraged long has a price at which the position can be forced out. If that level is visible, other traders can follow it.
If enough traders keep an eye on this, the level could attract more attention than if the position remained private. Some traders may use it as a risk marker. Others may try to fade the crowd or copy the same direction until the position becomes part of a public narrative.
None of that requires a conspiracy. It only requires a split screen.
The public aspect also changes the meaning of speed. A liquidation level that once belonged mainly to the trader and the location can now circulate through dashboards, screenshots, X-posts and chat rooms before the price gets there.
The result is a faster feedback loop where more traders can decide whether the level is a warning, opportunity or noise.
That makes the position useful even for traders who never plan to follow it. A controlled liquidation band can serve as a reference for stop placement, hedging and risk reduction, but does not guarantee that the price will reach that level.
The public value is shared visibility, not a promise of direction.
The Hyperliquid signal still has limits
Public whale watching provides some relevant signals, but is usually a poor forecast. A visible liquidation zone can tell traders where pressure may increase. It leaves open whether the price will move there, whether the whale will add margin, whether the position will be closed, or whether the crowd is already leaning too far in one direction.
That’s why the Machi episode works best as live market data and not celebrity spectacle. It once again raises the question of whether publicly following highly leveraged accounts changes the way traders form short-term expectations about Hyperliquid.
CryptoSlate has covered related Hyperliquid and liquidation card episodes from several angles. A March 2025 Hyperliquid incident showed how a risky whaling trade could lead to location-level losses.
A Bitcoin whale loss on Hyperliquid in June 2025 showed how large leveraged positions can turn specific price levels into a public drama. For more information, we also discussed how liquidation heatmaps can identify volatility zones before prices get there.
This is recurring behavior: traders pay attention to more than just the price. They look at who could be forced to sell, where that forced sale could take place and how many other people are watching at the same level.
| Visible signal | What it can show | Boundaries |
|---|---|---|
| Lookonchain liquidation post | A public claim that the account was repeatedly liquidated while ETH was still present | Trader motive, identity beyond attribution, or future behavior |
| HypurrScan address route | A public place where you can inspect the account path cited in connection with the claim | A static current position unless the page is refreshed upon publishing |
| CoinGlass liquidation card | Price zones where liquidation amounts cluster | Coordination by traders or certainty that the price must reach a level |
| Social attention | Whether a position becomes part of the public trading conversation | Causal relationship between attention and liquidation |
What to watch next
The most useful signal going forward is whether public data continues to change traders’ behavior.
If the account reduces exposure, adds margin or disappears from the discussion, the episode may remain a short-lived trading spectacle. If ETH trades toward visible liquidation clusters while the address is still widely watched, the setup becomes a clearer example of reflexive pressure, without proving coordination, causality, or direction.
That feedback loop is why public perpetrator positions feel different from older whale-watching practices. A wallet transfer can indicate intent. A liquidation card linked to a monitored perpetrator position can show a possible trigger.
Once that trigger is shared across market dashboards and social feeds, the position becomes a reference point for risk managers, momentum traders and spectators alike.
The risk is overestimating what the data can say. The public liquidation levels alone do not meet a trading plan and do not make ETH’s next move predictable. However, they do change the information environment around a large position.
So the TL;DR is basically that public hyperliquid whale positions become a market signal when they combine address visibility, liquidation cards, and social attention. The signal offers no promise about direction. It is a visible weak point that traders can see, discuss and trade before the next liquidation headline arrives.



